As patients decline from health to type 2 diabetes, glucose-stimulated insulin secretion (GSIS) typically becomes impaired. Although GSIS is driven predominantly by direct sensing of a rise in blood glucose by pancreatic β-cells, there is growing evidence that hypothalamic neurons control other aspects of peripheral glucose metabolism. Here we investigated the role of the brain in the modulation of GSIS. To examine the effects of increasing or decreasing hypothalamic glucose sensing on glucose tolerance and insulin secretion, glucose or inhibitors of glucokinase, respectively, were infused into the third ventricle during intravenous glucose tolerance tests (IVGTTs). Glucose-infused rats displayed improved glucose handling, particularly within the first few minutes of the IVGTT, with a significantly lower area under the excursion curve within the first 10 min (AUC0-10). This was explained by increased insulin secretion. In contrast, infusion of the glucokinase inhibitors glucosamine or mannoheptulose worsened glucose tolerance and decreased GSIS in the first few minutes of IVGTT. Our data suggest a role for brain glucose sensors in the regulation of GSIS, particularly during the early phase. We propose that pharmacological agents targeting hypothalamic glucose-sensing pathways may represent novel therapeutic strategies for enhancing early phase insulin secretion in type 2 diabetes.
The mechanisms underpinning impaired defensive counterregulatory responses to hypoglycemia that develop in some people with diabetes who suffer recurrent episodes of hypoglycemia are unknown. Previous work examining whether this is a consequence of increased glucose delivery to the hypothalamus, postulated to be the major hypoglycemia-sensing region, has been inconclusive. Here, we hypothesized instead that increased hypothalamic glucose phosphorylation, the first committed intracellular step in glucose metabolism, might develop following exposure to hypoglycemia. We anticipated that this adaptation might tend to preserve glucose flux during hypoglycemia, thus reducing detection of a falling glucose. We first validated a model of recurrent hypoglycemia in chronically catheterized (right jugular vein) rats receiving daily injections of insulin. We confirmed that this model of recurrent insulin-induced hypoglycemia results in impaired counterregulation, with responses of the key counterregulatory hormone, epinephrine, being suppressed significantly and progressively from the first day to the fourth day of insulin-induced hypoglycemia. In another cohort, we investigated the changes in brain glucose phosphorylation activity over 4 days of recurrent insulin-induced hypoglycemia. In keeping with our hypothesis, we found that recurrent hypoglycemia markedly and significantly increased hypothalamic glucose phosphorylation activity in a day-dependent fashion, with day 4 values 2.8 ± 0.6-fold higher than day 1 (P < .05), whereas there was no change in glucose phosphorylation activity in brain stem and frontal cortex. These findings suggest that the hypothalamus may adapt to recurrent hypoglycemia by increasing glucose phosphorylation; and we speculate that this metabolic adaptation may contribute, at least partly, to hypoglycemia-induced counterregulatory failure.
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